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. 2015 May 29;7(6):4189-98.
doi: 10.3390/nu7064189.

Iodized salt in Cambodia: trends from 2008 to 2014

Affiliations

Iodized salt in Cambodia: trends from 2008 to 2014

Arnaud Laillou et al. Nutrients. .

Abstract

Though the consequences of nutritional iodine deficiency have been known for a long time, in Cambodia its elimination has only become a priority in the last 18 years. The Royal Government of Cambodia initiated the National Sub-Committee for Control of Iodine Deficiency Disorders in 1996 to fight this problem. Using three different surveys providing information across all provinces, we examined the compliance of salt iodization in Cambodia over the last 6 years. Salt samples from the 24 provinces were collect at the household level in 2008 (n = 566) and 2011 (n = 1275) and at the market level in 2014 (n = 1862) and analysed through a wavelength spectrophotometer for iodine content. According to the samples collected, the median iodine content significantly dropped from 22 mg/kg (25th/75th percentile: 2/37 mg/kg) in 2011 to 0 mg/kg in 2014 (25th/75th percentile: 0/8.9 mg/kg) (p < 0.001). The proportion of non-iodized salt within our collected salt drastically increased from 22% in 2011 to 62% in 2014 (p < 0.001). Since the international organizations ceased to support the procurement of iodine, the prevalence of salt compliant with the Cambodian declined within our samples. To date, the current levels of iodine added to tested salt are unsatisfactory as 92% of those salts do not meet the government requirements (99.6% of the coarse salt and 82.4% of the fine salt). This inappropriate iodization could illustrate the lack of periodic monitoring and enforcement from government entities. Therefore, government quality inspection should be reinforced to reduce the quantity of salt not meeting the national requirement.

Keywords: Cambodia; iodization; salt; trends.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Percentage of salt in each iodine content category for all salt according to WYD testing.
Figure 2
Figure 2
2014 Proportion (in %) of non-iodized fine salt in different provinces of Cambodia.

References

    1. University of Tulane, Epiodemiological Data: Cambodia, 1997. [(accessed on 13 April 2015)]. Available online: http://www.tulane.edu/~internut/Countries/Cambodia/cambodiaiodine.html.
    1. National Sub-Committee for Control of IDD and UNICEF . The 2011 National Representative Survey of Iodine Nutrition and Implementation of Universal Iodization Program in Cambodia. Ministry of Planning; Phnom Penh, Cambodia: 2011.
    1. National Institute of Public Health, National Institute of Statistics and ORC Macro . Cambodia Demographic and Health Survey 2000. Royal Government of Cambodia; Phnom Penh, Cambodia: 2000.
    1. Conkle J., Carton T., Un S., Berdaga V. Cambodia chidren have ample iodine intake but only 70% of households are covered by iodized salt. IDD Newsl. 2013;41:4–7.
    1. National Sub-Committee for Control of IDD and UNICEF . The 2008 National Representative Survey of Iodine Nutrition and Implementation of Universal Iodization Program in Cambodia. Ministry of Planning; Phnom Penh, Cambodia: 2008.

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